I personally used Fiji water to remove aluminum. I did a Quest lab blood test before and after 4 months of 3-4 cups per day. I reduced my levels by a minimum of 16%. The Quest lab did not test below a certain level so it’s possible that I removed even more.
I still test with high CRP levels but my cognition seems to have improved. I no longer struggle to find the right word during conversations. So I will continue with the Fiji water. I use Dr Kory Aurmina we water purification and a Brita filter because the Fiji water has arsenic in it. My arsenic levels were tested at the same time as my aluminum levels.
A question for Dr Crouse. I have a 26 yr old relative with autism. Would detoxing aluminum still help resolve his autism at his age? The autism community seems to think that no mitigations are helpful after the teen years.
Also, since ED seems to be a consequence of cardiovascular disease, could drinking Fiji water help with that condition?
Great you have seen improvement from drinking silica water. You should continue to see improvement and your CRP levels should lower. CRP is a biomarker for aluminum toxicity. CRP is discussed in Chapter 6 'Biomarkers - Aluminum Accumulation' page 90-92. We have reports of a 21 year old improving. Here is an excerpt "I don’t know how to explain it other than say he is more aware. Our conversations are getting to be more interactive." The full account can be found in Chapter 8 page 127. Yes ED is a early sign of cardiovascular disease so drinking silica water will most likely improve ED. Here is a link to our website where you and your relatives can find more anecdotal information on Autism. https://prevent-alzheimers-autism-stroke.com/sample-page/
Very interesting interview and topic of discussion.
First, I have to say the Unbekoming substack posts are a must read for anyone wanting to increase their knowledge base and understanding of a host of critical topics to health and well being.
As my Grandmother died of Alzheimers, and this particular topic of aluminum concentrated in the body being a catalyst for cardiovascular and memory issues as well as sperm count decline, it becomes apparent where anecdotal correlation bear support for Dr. Crouse's thesis.
My Grandmother had coffee every morning from an aluminum pot for as long as I could remember when she was alive. Coffee is acidic, so corollary to the cooking with aluminum study results, I think her use of the aluminum coffee pot every day could very well be causation to her Alzheimers. My Mother on the other hand, used stainless steel and cast iron cookware exclusively. She lived 10 years longer than her own mother and her mind was sharp as a tact until the day of her passing.
Men with low sperm count correlation of aluminum toxicity brings to mind the packaging of nearly all sodas and energy drinks these days in aluminum cans. All of these drinks have relative ratios of acidity which could very well be leaching the aluminum into suspension in the beverage from the point of production through to its shelf life and consumption. Given the extraordinary amounts of consumption of such beverages in virtually all cultures around the planet, perhaps this is a big issue in declining fertility. Glass bottling is a better option of course given that glass is nothing more than solidified molten silica. So bonus plan there I'd say if the leaching action is equivalent from one packaging method to another.
As the evidence is clear regarding the toxicity of aluminum, perhaps promoting a return to glass bottling of beverages would be a good start. Yes, it is more expensive than aluminum. Though I would argue the health benefits of glass alternatives vs plastic or aluminum, as well as the recyclability of glass packaging containers without the requirement to re-melt the container. It only needs high temperature disinfectant process with appropriate dwell time and then can conveniently be re-used without destruction / re-melt / re-form / re-fill.
I am sorry your grandmother died of Alzheimer's. Coffee as you say was most likely a major source of aluminum for her where she used an aluminum pot and most likely drank the coffee on a daily basis. My mother in law cooked tomatoes from her garden to make tomato juice in an aluminum pan. She drank it most mornings. Coffee was also a source of aluminum for her as most drip style coffee makers have an aluminum heating element which adds aluminum to the coffee. Coffee makers are a large source of aluminum. Dennis has tested some aluminum cans and in some cans aluminum leaches through the plastic coating. This testing data as well as testing from other sources can be found on page 69 in Chapter 4 'Dysevolution is Not Taking Advantage of OSA’s Magic'.
Horsetail is one of the potential silica sources my husband tested. It does not have enough OSA to remove aluminum. Please see Table 7 page 95 in the book to see the testing data. Perhaps you can provide Dr. Cowan with this information.
I tried to do the recipe from the book with the blue zones in it but buying stuff from chemicals.com just didn't sit well with me. I've settled for now filtering water using a product called zero filter (which can take lead out of water) and mixing in 1:1 roughly fiji water. I half it because Fiji water doesn't taste good to me. Its got too much in it for my taste. I like my water on the softer side, like poland springs. But half fiji, half zero water...I love it. Give it to my kids and dog sometimes. Wife thinks I'm crazy (as Bill Joel says she may be right).
For the record I bounced off the idea of making my own silicate water in the comment section of Dr. Exley's substack and it was not well received. It be great if Crouse and Exley could square that out somewhere.
I'm not used to sciency types coming right out about aluminum being a cause of autism. Refreshing. I think more research could be done but it tracks as far as I can tell. I don't think vaccines ever really did anything so I think they could just drop them. But if getting them to make an aluminum free version lets the gravy train keep rolling and leads to safer versions of ineffective vaccines...great. Progress.
Here is my vision. Silica in the form of OSA being added to municipal drinking water. It is possible as some municipalities currently add it to prevent pipe corrosion.
given the flouride nonsense I feel the general principle would be to have people opt into things than have to opt out. But I hope it becomes common knowledge the importance of silicate and the issues of aluminum burden. I suspect if we added aluminum burden to many health studies it would be enlightening.
I am Dennis' wife. Regarding Silicade the recipe for making silica water, Chris Exley and Dennis Crouse have corresponded. The Silicade recipe uses a powder form of sodium silicate and in the lab a liquid form is used. Here is an excerpt from a write up Dennis did in this regard. I will see if I can post a link to the full write up which is at our website. "Some researchers make OSA rich water in their laboratory. Chris Exley said in his recent book “In my laboratory we prepare water that is high in dissolved silicon – silicic acid – for research purposes”. I prepared OSA using a liquid source of sodium silicate as described in the chemical literature and found it to “require sophisticated laboratory equipment” as mentioned by Chris Exley in his recent book.
Thanks for responding. Good to know those two have engaged on some level with each other. I may try his latest recipe at some point. The idea of testing myself for aluminum is one I'll look to pursue at one point as well.
At one point my imagination was running wild and I thought it be cool if a person could design a backyard water feature that would reproduce aspects of Fiji water where it could give the sound of running water and even somehow produce silicate water to drink. But seems like a big design challenge. Hope others find out about this water and it helps them.
"Aluminum is both a neurotoxin and the third most abundant element in the earth’s crust. Because of this, life would not be possible on earth without the magic of OSA in drinking water."
Um, I just have to point out the logical inanity, unsoundness and absurdity of this statement. Your scientist friend is aware, isn't he, that natural aluminum abundance has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with ancient exposure or survival because of silica water, right? Your scientist friend is aware, isn't he, that natural aluminum is bound-up in mineral ores and that humans and life in general have not actually been exposed to any dangerous form of free aluminum to any degree until industrial modernity, right?
I already know about aluminum and silica, but a completely ridiculous and oblivious statement like that really makes me not want to read any more of this scientist's revelations. The kind of intellectual sloppiness that goes into a statement like that is crazy.
DjO I am Dennis’ wife and here is his response to your comment.
Eighth Counterfactual
Your comment is an obfuscating counterfactual with the goal of discrediting me the author of my new book entitled “Discovering Magic in Water that Makes Life Possible on Earth”. It is a transparent attempt to convince people to not read my new peer reviewed book.
In my new book I define counterfactuals on page 43 and then describe seven of them in chapters 3 and 4. If I ever republish the book, your counterfactual will be the eighth. Your counterfactual is - before the advent of aluminum purification from bauxite in the late 1800’s there was so little aluminum in the diet of man that our ancestors could not have evolved mechanisms to protect themselves from aluminum toxicity.
Suspended Aluminum Loaded Diatomite in Paleolithic Drinking Water
Natural suspended solids often contain high levels of bound aluminum as silicates. An example of a suspended silicate in natural water is diatomite that consists of siliceous skeletons of microscopic water plants. Diatomite has a high porosity, surface area, and affinity for aluminum. Fresh water drank by hominids 1.75 to 1.0mya came from diatomite producing wetlands in the Olduvai Gorge. When ingested, aluminum loaded diatomite particles release aluminum in the acidity of the human stomach (i.e., pH 1.5 to 3.5 in healthy adults).
Mammals in general have acidic stomachs and accumulate aluminum from digestion of diatomite containing fresh water in the Olduvai Gorge. Mammals were part of the Hunter-gatherer’s diet. Therefore, our paleolithic ancestors were exposed to aluminum in their drinking water and diet. As a result, aluminum accumulated in their brains and bones only limited by their evolved protection from aluminum by OSA (orthosilicic acid) in their drinking water.
Horsetail does not have enough OSA. Dennis did not test nettles but we can assume it won't have enough OSA. Mineral water is the only source of enough OSA to remove aluminum. In the book you can find a list of mineral waters that have sufficient OSA to remove aluminum. Please see Table 7 page 95 in Dennis' book to see the supplements tested and the amount of OSA each contained.
DE does not have enough of the form of silica needed to remove aluminum. You need silica in the form of OSA (orthosilicic acid). Dennis has tested many supplements for OSA. You can find the testing data in Table 7 page 95 in the book. Mineral water is the only source of enough OSA to remove aluminum.
Interested in your opinion on whether silica, while obviously helpful prior to the transhumanist poisoning of recent years, has any downsides potentially contributing to bodily nanotechnology growth as pronounced by certain docs.
I am Dennis‘s wife. The beauty of drinking silica rich mineral water is there are only health benefits such as improved heart and brain health as well as increasing longevity. You can learn about other health benefits by reading Dennis‘s book. Dennis is a chemist and when you read through this interview, you will see he has developed a recipe for making your own silica water called Silicade.
Silicade has silica in the form of OSA (orthosilicic acid) which is the form needed to remove aluminum. Dennis has tested the Silicade for the amount of OSA. This information is given in Chapter 7. Discovering How to Make the Magic. Page 94-109. The Silicade was made in a way so it is identical to Fiji water in the amount of OSA as tested by Dennis using Coradin’s Blue Silicomolybdic Spectrophotometric Assay . My husband and I have been drinking 3 to 4 cups of Silicade a day for more than 10 years and we have lowered our aluminum body burden to below the Mayo Clinic's healthy reference level. We are in our 70's. We have repeatedly tested and the results are on Page 84 table 5. The book is available on Amazon.
Because of Dr. Christopher Exley work and book, I have been drinking high silica mineral water for a long time. While Fiji has the highest levels of any commercial water, I’ve been drinking Gerolsteiner in glass bottles for years. I do like the carbonation and drink at least 750 ml a day minimum. It has 40 mg of silica per liter compared to 93 mg/l with Fiji. Not sure this is enough, but I limit my aluminum intake as much as I can with no aluminum cookware, I don’t use foil or drink out of cans, no aluminum in my deodorant and other things.
Please read the answer to question number 13 in the interview. Biosil does not have enough OSA to remove aluminum. Dennis has tested many silica supplements. The only source of enough OSA is mineral water.
Is there any supplement available which provides a significant enough amount of OSA to be impactful? I have an autistic adult son. He lives away from home in a special needs community and adding a supplement would facilitate his use.
I commented above. See question number 13. The only source of enough silica in the form of OSA which is required to remove aluminum is mineral water. It is challenging when someone is in a residential situation to have them drink mineral water. The staff has to be on board.
I personally used Fiji water to remove aluminum. I did a Quest lab blood test before and after 4 months of 3-4 cups per day. I reduced my levels by a minimum of 16%. The Quest lab did not test below a certain level so it’s possible that I removed even more.
I still test with high CRP levels but my cognition seems to have improved. I no longer struggle to find the right word during conversations. So I will continue with the Fiji water. I use Dr Kory Aurmina we water purification and a Brita filter because the Fiji water has arsenic in it. My arsenic levels were tested at the same time as my aluminum levels.
A question for Dr Crouse. I have a 26 yr old relative with autism. Would detoxing aluminum still help resolve his autism at his age? The autism community seems to think that no mitigations are helpful after the teen years.
Also, since ED seems to be a consequence of cardiovascular disease, could drinking Fiji water help with that condition?
Great you have seen improvement from drinking silica water. You should continue to see improvement and your CRP levels should lower. CRP is a biomarker for aluminum toxicity. CRP is discussed in Chapter 6 'Biomarkers - Aluminum Accumulation' page 90-92. We have reports of a 21 year old improving. Here is an excerpt "I don’t know how to explain it other than say he is more aware. Our conversations are getting to be more interactive." The full account can be found in Chapter 8 page 127. Yes ED is a early sign of cardiovascular disease so drinking silica water will most likely improve ED. Here is a link to our website where you and your relatives can find more anecdotal information on Autism. https://prevent-alzheimers-autism-stroke.com/sample-page/
Very interesting interview and topic of discussion.
First, I have to say the Unbekoming substack posts are a must read for anyone wanting to increase their knowledge base and understanding of a host of critical topics to health and well being.
As my Grandmother died of Alzheimers, and this particular topic of aluminum concentrated in the body being a catalyst for cardiovascular and memory issues as well as sperm count decline, it becomes apparent where anecdotal correlation bear support for Dr. Crouse's thesis.
My Grandmother had coffee every morning from an aluminum pot for as long as I could remember when she was alive. Coffee is acidic, so corollary to the cooking with aluminum study results, I think her use of the aluminum coffee pot every day could very well be causation to her Alzheimers. My Mother on the other hand, used stainless steel and cast iron cookware exclusively. She lived 10 years longer than her own mother and her mind was sharp as a tact until the day of her passing.
Men with low sperm count correlation of aluminum toxicity brings to mind the packaging of nearly all sodas and energy drinks these days in aluminum cans. All of these drinks have relative ratios of acidity which could very well be leaching the aluminum into suspension in the beverage from the point of production through to its shelf life and consumption. Given the extraordinary amounts of consumption of such beverages in virtually all cultures around the planet, perhaps this is a big issue in declining fertility. Glass bottling is a better option of course given that glass is nothing more than solidified molten silica. So bonus plan there I'd say if the leaching action is equivalent from one packaging method to another.
As the evidence is clear regarding the toxicity of aluminum, perhaps promoting a return to glass bottling of beverages would be a good start. Yes, it is more expensive than aluminum. Though I would argue the health benefits of glass alternatives vs plastic or aluminum, as well as the recyclability of glass packaging containers without the requirement to re-melt the container. It only needs high temperature disinfectant process with appropriate dwell time and then can conveniently be re-used without destruction / re-melt / re-form / re-fill.
I am sorry your grandmother died of Alzheimer's. Coffee as you say was most likely a major source of aluminum for her where she used an aluminum pot and most likely drank the coffee on a daily basis. My mother in law cooked tomatoes from her garden to make tomato juice in an aluminum pan. She drank it most mornings. Coffee was also a source of aluminum for her as most drip style coffee makers have an aluminum heating element which adds aluminum to the coffee. Coffee makers are a large source of aluminum. Dennis has tested some aluminum cans and in some cans aluminum leaches through the plastic coating. This testing data as well as testing from other sources can be found on page 69 in Chapter 4 'Dysevolution is Not Taking Advantage of OSA’s Magic'.
Horsetail tea has Silica.
Flouride is by product of aluminum production.
ALCOA bought off Congress to dump it in the water supply to avoid cost of disposal.
Not a coincidence that the generation that used Aluminum cookware has Alzheimers.
Read Murder By Injection by Eustace Mullins.
Dr. COWAN recommends horsetail for silica.
Horsetail is one of the potential silica sources my husband tested. It does not have enough OSA to remove aluminum. Please see Table 7 page 95 in the book to see the testing data. Perhaps you can provide Dr. Cowan with this information.
Is there a table online somewhere?
If not, which book of his has this table?
The table is only available in the new book. Table 7 page 95. There is also information how he did the testing. Here is a link for ordering the book on Amazon. https://www.amazon.com/Discovering-Magic-Water-Makes-Possible/dp/B0GPQCQWK1/ref=sr_1_3?crid=3UG30QDKDXTAI&dib=eyJ2IjoiMSJ9.znGOL5AKdiQhtWWOwDMOnQSpwg7rj_E6Ma3-c7BJF3IWqBCk1SqCIUq4dG7wzKGAh4g4oU7kxU4AY7yFFi5h4c56oXNi6J2FDDpUqgGwHfA._VDLVmvZxdbPZsHa8ZHjqv5ZFzAvqyy21WiwWx7ZQQU&dib_tag=se&keywords=dennis+n+crouse&qid=1774374919&sprefix=dennis+n+crouse%2Caps%2C168&sr=8-3
Liked, read some comments, visited your (Dennis and Laurie's) website, and shared. Thank you.. you two. :)
I tried to do the recipe from the book with the blue zones in it but buying stuff from chemicals.com just didn't sit well with me. I've settled for now filtering water using a product called zero filter (which can take lead out of water) and mixing in 1:1 roughly fiji water. I half it because Fiji water doesn't taste good to me. Its got too much in it for my taste. I like my water on the softer side, like poland springs. But half fiji, half zero water...I love it. Give it to my kids and dog sometimes. Wife thinks I'm crazy (as Bill Joel says she may be right).
For the record I bounced off the idea of making my own silicate water in the comment section of Dr. Exley's substack and it was not well received. It be great if Crouse and Exley could square that out somewhere.
I'm not used to sciency types coming right out about aluminum being a cause of autism. Refreshing. I think more research could be done but it tracks as far as I can tell. I don't think vaccines ever really did anything so I think they could just drop them. But if getting them to make an aluminum free version lets the gravy train keep rolling and leads to safer versions of ineffective vaccines...great. Progress.
Here is my vision. Silica in the form of OSA being added to municipal drinking water. It is possible as some municipalities currently add it to prevent pipe corrosion.
given the flouride nonsense I feel the general principle would be to have people opt into things than have to opt out. But I hope it becomes common knowledge the importance of silicate and the issues of aluminum burden. I suspect if we added aluminum burden to many health studies it would be enlightening.
I am Dennis' wife. Regarding Silicade the recipe for making silica water, Chris Exley and Dennis Crouse have corresponded. The Silicade recipe uses a powder form of sodium silicate and in the lab a liquid form is used. Here is an excerpt from a write up Dennis did in this regard. I will see if I can post a link to the full write up which is at our website. "Some researchers make OSA rich water in their laboratory. Chris Exley said in his recent book “In my laboratory we prepare water that is high in dissolved silicon – silicic acid – for research purposes”. I prepared OSA using a liquid source of sodium silicate as described in the chemical literature and found it to “require sophisticated laboratory equipment” as mentioned by Chris Exley in his recent book.
Unlike liquids, powders can be measured with measuring spoons and therefore, sophisticated laboratory equipment is not required. I am lucky to live in the U.S. and not the U.K., as in the U.S. we have the PQ Corporation as a source of powdered sodium silicate." https://prevent-alzheimers-autism-stroke.com/2023/06/25/hand-crafted-silicade-made-the-easy-way/
Thanks for responding. Good to know those two have engaged on some level with each other. I may try his latest recipe at some point. The idea of testing myself for aluminum is one I'll look to pursue at one point as well.
At one point my imagination was running wild and I thought it be cool if a person could design a backyard water feature that would reproduce aspects of Fiji water where it could give the sound of running water and even somehow produce silicate water to drink. But seems like a big design challenge. Hope others find out about this water and it helps them.
"Aluminum is both a neurotoxin and the third most abundant element in the earth’s crust. Because of this, life would not be possible on earth without the magic of OSA in drinking water."
Um, I just have to point out the logical inanity, unsoundness and absurdity of this statement. Your scientist friend is aware, isn't he, that natural aluminum abundance has absolutely nothing whatsoever to do with ancient exposure or survival because of silica water, right? Your scientist friend is aware, isn't he, that natural aluminum is bound-up in mineral ores and that humans and life in general have not actually been exposed to any dangerous form of free aluminum to any degree until industrial modernity, right?
I already know about aluminum and silica, but a completely ridiculous and oblivious statement like that really makes me not want to read any more of this scientist's revelations. The kind of intellectual sloppiness that goes into a statement like that is crazy.
DjO I am Dennis’ wife and here is his response to your comment.
Eighth Counterfactual
Your comment is an obfuscating counterfactual with the goal of discrediting me the author of my new book entitled “Discovering Magic in Water that Makes Life Possible on Earth”. It is a transparent attempt to convince people to not read my new peer reviewed book.
In my new book I define counterfactuals on page 43 and then describe seven of them in chapters 3 and 4. If I ever republish the book, your counterfactual will be the eighth. Your counterfactual is - before the advent of aluminum purification from bauxite in the late 1800’s there was so little aluminum in the diet of man that our ancestors could not have evolved mechanisms to protect themselves from aluminum toxicity.
Suspended Aluminum Loaded Diatomite in Paleolithic Drinking Water
Natural suspended solids often contain high levels of bound aluminum as silicates. An example of a suspended silicate in natural water is diatomite that consists of siliceous skeletons of microscopic water plants. Diatomite has a high porosity, surface area, and affinity for aluminum. Fresh water drank by hominids 1.75 to 1.0mya came from diatomite producing wetlands in the Olduvai Gorge. When ingested, aluminum loaded diatomite particles release aluminum in the acidity of the human stomach (i.e., pH 1.5 to 3.5 in healthy adults).
Mammals in general have acidic stomachs and accumulate aluminum from digestion of diatomite containing fresh water in the Olduvai Gorge. Mammals were part of the Hunter-gatherer’s diet. Therefore, our paleolithic ancestors were exposed to aluminum in their drinking water and diet. As a result, aluminum accumulated in their brains and bones only limited by their evolved protection from aluminum by OSA (orthosilicic acid) in their drinking water.
Dennis N Crouse
How about MSM powder? Is it a good source of OSA?
MSM powder contains no silicone and therefor on OSA. OSA is the form of silica needed to remove aluminum. (Orthosilicic acid)
Thank You for clarifying. I was confusing silicon with sulfur. How about horsetail and nettle. I prefer natural to chemical concoctions :)
Horsetail does not have enough OSA. Dennis did not test nettles but we can assume it won't have enough OSA. Mineral water is the only source of enough OSA to remove aluminum. In the book you can find a list of mineral waters that have sufficient OSA to remove aluminum. Please see Table 7 page 95 in Dennis' book to see the supplements tested and the amount of OSA each contained.
Isn't diatomaceous earth mainly silica? I was wondering whether it has ever been looked into.
DE does not have enough of the form of silica needed to remove aluminum. You need silica in the form of OSA (orthosilicic acid). Dennis has tested many supplements for OSA. You can find the testing data in Table 7 page 95 in the book. Mineral water is the only source of enough OSA to remove aluminum.
Thanks for the answer. It's very helpful.
You are welcome. Thanks for your interest in this information.
Interested in your opinion on whether silica, while obviously helpful prior to the transhumanist poisoning of recent years, has any downsides potentially contributing to bodily nanotechnology growth as pronounced by certain docs.
I am Dennis‘s wife. The beauty of drinking silica rich mineral water is there are only health benefits such as improved heart and brain health as well as increasing longevity. You can learn about other health benefits by reading Dennis‘s book. Dennis is a chemist and when you read through this interview, you will see he has developed a recipe for making your own silica water called Silicade.
Dr Christopher Exley ( @drchristopherexley https://drchristopherexley.substack.com/ ) says that silicade doesn't have the proper form.
Did your husband test his silicade formula and if so how did it compare to fiji/etc?
Silicade has silica in the form of OSA (orthosilicic acid) which is the form needed to remove aluminum. Dennis has tested the Silicade for the amount of OSA. This information is given in Chapter 7. Discovering How to Make the Magic. Page 94-109. The Silicade was made in a way so it is identical to Fiji water in the amount of OSA as tested by Dennis using Coradin’s Blue Silicomolybdic Spectrophotometric Assay . My husband and I have been drinking 3 to 4 cups of Silicade a day for more than 10 years and we have lowered our aluminum body burden to below the Mayo Clinic's healthy reference level. We are in our 70's. We have repeatedly tested and the results are on Page 84 table 5. The book is available on Amazon.
Because of Dr. Christopher Exley work and book, I have been drinking high silica mineral water for a long time. While Fiji has the highest levels of any commercial water, I’ve been drinking Gerolsteiner in glass bottles for years. I do like the carbonation and drink at least 750 ml a day minimum. It has 40 mg of silica per liter compared to 93 mg/l with Fiji. Not sure this is enough, but I limit my aluminum intake as much as I can with no aluminum cookware, I don’t use foil or drink out of cans, no aluminum in my deodorant and other things.
When inquiring on an AI platform I am guided that Biosil drops offer a quality product
??
Thank you Laurie.
Please read the answer to question number 13 in the interview. Biosil does not have enough OSA to remove aluminum. Dennis has tested many silica supplements. The only source of enough OSA is mineral water.
Is there any supplement available which provides a significant enough amount of OSA to be impactful? I have an autistic adult son. He lives away from home in a special needs community and adding a supplement would facilitate his use.
Thank you for your work.
I commented above. See question number 13. The only source of enough silica in the form of OSA which is required to remove aluminum is mineral water. It is challenging when someone is in a residential situation to have them drink mineral water. The staff has to be on board.
See my comments.
See my comment.
Yes…..and I need to be careful that I am not viewed as being to demanding of staff as I have learned from experience
It is a delicate balance between making sure your loved one is getting good care at the same time as being a strong advocate.